This week in markets: US recession risk hits 100% as crypto tokenomics highlighted

Quick Take

  • The U.S. is almost certain to enter a recession, according to Bloomberg Economics.
  • Bitcoin and Ethereum’s math-based and transparent economics contrast with opaque central bank policies.
  • Nevertheless, the crypto market remains closely tied to Federal Reserve interest rate hikes.

The chance of a recession in the United States has now hit 100%, according to new Bloomberg Economics model projections — meaning that it is "effectively certain" the country's economy will contract over the next year.

Bitcoin, the first and foremost cryptocurrency, was born out of a global economic recession — but has never existed inside one. The same goes, of course, for Ethereum and every crypto protocol spawned after it. If the aforementioned projections are correct, the blockchain and cryptocurrency industry will enter a new, distinct and defined chapter of existence.

Central bank policy vs. tokenomics

The uncertain and fluid economic policy for fiat currencies has come into even sharper contrast with the fixed, mathematics-based "tokenomics" of major cryptocurrencies. Bitcoin, for example, has a set amount of new coins minted every block — with an ultimate supply cap of 21 million coins. (Though many have already been permanently lost, making the real total supply effectively smaller).

"The current macroeconomic situation is precisely the environment Bitcoin is meant to thrive in," Hunain Naseer, head of content at COIN360 told The Block. "It is purpose-built to withstand the kind of arbitrary controls that are wreaking havoc on fiat currencies around the world."

Ethereum's economics, meanwhile, have stolen the spotlight following its high-profile move from an energy-intensive proof-of-work consensus mechanism to the more environmentally friendly proof-of-stake, which was dubbed "The Merge."

The supply growth of ether has declined to -0.04% over the past 30 days, according to tracker ultrasound.money, making it deflationary over that span. Proponents of the second-ranked crypto protocol have already expressed excitement over ether's deflationary potential in periods of increased demand — such as a future bull market.

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On-chain volume for Ethereum is in a general decline. Source: The Block

Focus remains on Fed rate hikes

Despite crypto proponents unsurprisingly finding many cryptocurrencies' tokenomics favorable, crypto markets remain closely tied to macro factors — including rate hikes from the U.S. Federal Reserve.

The near-unanimous expectation for the Fed's Nov. 1-2 policy meeting is that another big interest rate hike will be approved. The question many pundits are asking revolves around how much further the central bank can push interest rates before putting too much strain on economic growth.

More hawkishness from the Fed may not portend positive price action for cryptocurrency investors — but blocks will continue to be produced while transparent and math-based economics will remain in play.


© 2023 The Block. All Rights Reserved. This article is provided for informational purposes only. It is not offered or intended to be used as legal, tax, investment, financial, or other advice.

About Author

Adam is the managing editor for Europe, the Middle East and Africa. He is based in central Europe and was a managing editor and podcast host at the crypto exchange OKX's former research arm, OKX Insights. Before that, he co-founded BeInCrypto.com, which he elevated into one of the leading crypto media brands at its peak as the editor-in-chief. Earlier, he served as the editor-in-chief at Bitcoinist.com. Before joining the blockchain and crypto industry, he worked for Looper.com, Grunge.com and SVG.com. He tweets via @XBT002 and can be emailed at [email protected].